The third-year player out of North Carolina State has touched the ball just 60 total times for the defending Super Bowl champions but has turned those opportunities into 313 total yards and six touchdowns. Brown's averaging a score every 10 touches in 2012, which is spectacular by backup running back standards.

Sure, Brown's nose for the end zone is a nightmare for Ahmad Bradshaw owners, but it's also what makes Tom Coughlin's second running back option so valuable.

Brown has only carried the ball in six games this year but has failed to score in only one game in which he had a rushing attempt. That speaks volumes about his remarkable efficiency in the New York backfield.

Will Andre Brown finish the 2012 regular season with more or fewer than 10 rushing TDs?

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Will Andre Brown finish the 2012 regular season with more or fewer than 10 rushing TDs?

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Total votes: 165

The Baltimore native has scored more fantasy points with fewer carries than Maurice Jones-Drew, Steven Jackson and Ryan Mathews so far this season. It's safe to say that Brown is worth holding on to this fall.

Even if Brown doesn't maintain his 4.8 yards-per-carry and 8.1 yards-per-reception averages, he is a scoring machine and has an unrivaled nose for the end zone. He has scored a touchdown in each of the Giants' past three games and is tied for third in the NFL for most rushing touchdowns, trailing only Arian Foster and Doug Martin after nine weeks.

Despite the return of Bradshaw a few weeks back, Brown has still been New York's most efficient rusher, and that doesn't look like it will change anytime soon.

It doesn't matter if Brown only carries 25 percent of the load for the Giants' running game the rest of the season, because his knack for scoring touchdowns makes him a fantasy stud and, more importantly, a keeper.